## Abstract Recent research has significantly broadened our understanding of how the teleost somite is patterned to achieve embryonic and postembryonic myogenesis. Medial (adaxial) cells and posterior cells of the early epithelial somite generate embryonic superficial slow and deep fast muscle fibe
New insights into vascular collapse and growth dynamics in solid tumors
✍ Scribed by R.P. Araujo; D.L.S. McElwain
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 595 KB
- Volume
- 228
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
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✦ Synopsis
The experimentally-observed phenomenon of vascular collapse in tumors represents a significant barrier to the delivery of bloodborne therapeutic drugs, and has been attributed to the elevated tissue stresses resulting from confined proliferation of tumor cells. This paper presents a mathematical framework which describes the evolution of growth-induced stresses in tumors and gives new insights into both vascular collapse and tumor growth dynamics. The linear-elastic description of anisotropic growth adopted here provides the mechanical model with a realistic constitutive basis, incorporating both the solid and stress-relaxation characteristics of soft biological tissues. A particular distribution of spatially non-uniform growth is proposed which is considered representative of a vascular tumor. The stress distribution associated with this growth pattern predicts the onset of vascular collapse, producing the well-defined regions observed in vascular collapse experiments: a peripheral layer with open blood vessels adjacent to a region of vascular collapse, enclosing an inner region where the vessels are open. The model also highlights the roles of various tissue properties in inducing vascular collapse. Moreover, the tumor growth rates predicted by this model reflect experimental observations, with exponential growth taking place immediately following vascularization, followed by a period of exponential retardation.
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